Le choléra a un vaccin et par conséquent ; vacciner le maximum de personnes.
Pour le coronavirus ; il n'y a pas de vaccin ; il faut donc prendre les mesures que tous les pays appliquent. Vous avez le choix a ce moment: Chine France USA Allemagne ....
Thanks for your response. The reality however is very different from what you state. Cholera still kills hundreds of thousands every year, especially in Africa. How effective therefore are the vaccines? In my opinion, vaccines are neither the short nor long term solutions to highly contagious maladies. We should be focusing instead on the underlying cause of high societal vulnerability. This has a lot to do with societal / cultural perceptions and norms, personal hygiene and sanitation, and medical politics. Prioritizing local biomedical research and the development of locally adapted remedies should be the priority, rather than a global vaccine politics. I will also add that, globally, the reactive nature of health professionals, as well as the almost lack of interdisciplinary scientific research cooperation between biomedical professionals, environmental and social scientists, is a major failure in this regard. If this perspective could be adopted, it could open up avenues for epidemiological predictions and early response.